Losing faith: Global financiers look to de-Americanize

A US debt default could hit on Thursday, and world leaders are second guessing the dominant role America plays in finance. Regardless of the final decision in Washington, confidence and credibility in the US has already eroded.

In an editorial published by the Chinese
state-owned press agency Xinhua, a columnist says the US economy
has ‘failed’ and put many countries who hold state assets in
dollars at risk.

“To that end, several corner stones should be laid to underpin
a de-Americanized world,” the editorial read.

Last week China, the biggest US creditor, started to make
preparations for a technical default on loans. The European
Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China (PBC) have agreed to
start supplying each other with their currencies, avoiding the
dollar as an intermediary currency. The currency swap agreement
will last for three years and provide a maximum of 350 billion
yuan ($56 billion) to the ECB and 45 billion euro ($60.8 billion)
to the PBC.

In a further sign of growing distrust, China introduced a so-called “haircut”, or
a discount, on the value of US Treasuries held as collateral
against futures trades.

Developing and developed nations are equally concerned, and
institutions like the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) have issued several warnings.

Christine LaGarde, managing director of the IMF told the US they
must uphold their financial promises to the international
community and raise their debt ceiling. Failing to do so would
put the world “at risk of tipping yet again into a
recession,” LaGarde said in an interview on NBC’s ‘Meet the
Press’, which aired on October 13.

“You have to honor your signature, … give certainty to the
rest of the world,” LaGarde urged the US, a strong supporter
of the international lending tool.

The country that has long provided a sturdy backbone to the
global economy is now teetering on a mass default. If US
lawmakers don’t forge a solution to raising the debt ceiling by
October 17, investors with US treasury bonds, one of the
lowest-risk assets, could suffer.

“It’s not just China that’s at the mercy of US lawmakers, its
everybody in the world that is at the mercy of US lawmakers right
now,” David Kuo, Investment Advisor at Motley Fool, told RT .

“China is trying to diversify away from US Treasuries,” said
Kuo, adding investors “cannot just assume an asset is 100 percent
safe.”

Russia, ranked the 11th on the list of the US top creditors with
the estimated $132 billion in US Treasuries, plans to keep their
Treasuries.

"I don't see the need for revising our reserve investment
strategy in US Treasuries," Russian Finance Minister Anton
Siluanov said at a press conference on October 11 following a
meeting of the G20 finance and Central Bank chiefs.

If the US misses the debt ceiling deadline of October 17 and stops paying
its creditors, it would be the first major Western government to
do so since Nazi Germany under Hitler in 1933, which wasn’t able
to pay its debts following World War I.

The US has a bank holiday today in honor of Columbus Day;
however, after making little headway on solving the budget gap,
both the Senate and the House will hold sessions on Monday.

For Republicans, Obamacare has been a major stumbling block in
agreeing to raise the debt ceiling, as they see the legislation
as antithetical to their ‘small government’ philosophy.